Nau mai, haere mai, welcome to EyeContact. You are invited to respond to reviews and contribute to discussion by registering to participate.

JH

Darren Glass Photographs

AA
View Discussion
Darren Glass, Cosmo Flying Disc #327, 2000-2010, type c handprinted. Darren Glass, Cosmo Flying Disc #320, 2000-2010, type c handprinted. Darren Glass, 015 Cosmo Flying disc, contact print onto gold toned printing on paper Darren Glass, Taranaki - 6.45 a.m., 2011, type c Hand print (contact print). Darren Glass, 8 March 2010-2011 Hefty Roller 12.45 -12.50 pm., contact print onto selenium and gold toned silver gelatin paper Darren Glass, 22 February 2010-2011, Hefty Roller, 12.40-12.45 pm, contact print onto selenium and gold toned silver gelatin paper

It is hard to believe they are photographs not remotely representational (even of abstract painting), instead the results of a explorative light manipulating process; that they are only indexical to the physical interaction of the camera with the rocky ground, turbulent air or other meteorological conditions - not some aimed at and captured subject matter.

Auckland

 

Darren Glass

 

24 August - 24 September 2011

More photographic image-making wizardry here from Darren Glass, using his collection of highly functional handmade sculptures that double as pinhole cameras - sometimes multi-apertured - presenting his characteristically frenetic traces of spun around and jostled light.

I see the photographs as far more interesting than the sculpture which although fascinating as handmade objects, are only important as a means to an end. They are ‘the shadow’, the image print on paper is ‘the substance.’

Most of the images in this current show are coincidentally akin visually to improvised, gestural but soft-edged, painted abstractions, like smeared, scratched or sprayed, garish (or bleaching) squirts from some lurching convulsive tagger. Others are densely holistic in the manner of early Mark Tobey, with delicate grey, fine-lined, grassy fields that seem rhythmically drawn, caressed, seeded and sprouting. It is hard to believe they are photographs not remotely representational (even of abstract painting), instead the results of a explorative light manipulating process; that they are only indexical to the physical interaction of the camera with the rocky ground, turbulent air or other meteorological conditions - not some aimed at and captured subject matter.

Of the nine photographs, four come from airborne Frisbee cameras (Cosmo Flying Discs). One type has one pinhole, the other seven. With the first variety Glass has deliberately not attached the film firmly to the floor of the Frisbee, letting it slide around in mid-flight so that intermittent lines and blurry streaks appear.

With some other shots Glass has aimed his vertically distorting box-camera at Mt Taranaki but used a very long tube as a telephoto viewfinder to gain an extremely long focal length, so long a tripod is needed to support it at each end. With another large lozenge-shaped box camera featuring two carefully separated pinholes. he has exposed the film while walking along a track on the side of Mt Tongariro. The resulting landscape consists of upright and inverted vistas alternating in parallel rows along the length of the print.

Two other images were made by a robust camera in the form of a hollow plywood ring (it has 105 pinholes) designed to be rolled down the side of rocky volcanic craters. The resulting intricate images are found on a long strip densely packed with wavy hairy lines as if taken from an animal’s pelt. It becomes deceptively as a visual statement a peculiar sort of machine-made drawing that somebody like Rebecca Horn or Jean Tinguely might have invented. Or of course Simon Ingram.

It is always a buzz to see what Glass comes up with in his displays of unusual photographic images. Because I have a personal predilection towards nonobjective imagery (although that term I am inclined to argue about), I tend to be intrigued by Glass’s ‘painterly abstractions’ more than his narrative themes such as landscape walks or fishing - though they are hard to ignore. The Good Oil.

John Hurrell

Print | Facebook | Twitter | Email

 

Recent Posts by John Hurrell

JH
Anto Yeldezian, Wall Games, 2024, acrylic on canvas, 1400 x 1900 mm, detail

A Drive to Conquer

COASTAL SIGNS

Anto Yeldezian


Area


31 January - 1 March 2025

JH
Huseyin Sami, Cut Painting (BP), 2025, acrylic on canvas, 183 x 152.5 cm

The Creative Pleasures of ‘Mutilation’

SUMER

Huseyin Sami

 

Rhythm & Cuts

 

31 January - 1 March 2025

JH
Martin Creed, Work No. 3766, 2023, watercolour, gouache, acrylic, pencil on paper, 31 x 23.2 cm / 12 1/4 x 9 1/8 inches

Nifty ‘Brusherly’ Creed

MICHAEL LETT

Martin Creed


Like Favourite Socks in a Drawer


29 January - 1 March 2025

JH
Overall installation view of Judy Darragh's Forest of Dreams at Two Rooms

A Forest of Darraghs

TWO ROOMS

Judy Darragh


Forest of Dreams


31 January 2025 - 1 March 2025